BRICS leaders must take a courageous step on trade policy | Wandile Sihlobo
The BRICS Summit is underway in Brazil and is scheduled to conclude tomorrow, July 7. There are many themes on the minds of the political leaders in this group, but one aspect that is certainly important for all is easing trade friction within this group. For the long-term sustainability of BRICS, there must be a stronger economic ambition that ties the grouping together beyond its political and geopolitical alignments.
Across all BRICS countries, researchers, policymakers, and businesspeople have been attempting to adapt and address the restrictions caused by the U.S. Liberation Day tariffs, and there remains profound uncertainty about the path ahead, as the 90-day pause comes to an end this coming week.
However, what the BRICS countries have not reflected on is also the prohibitive tariffs they place against each other, which limit intra-BRICS trade.
The blame, while correct, cannot be placed solely on the U.S. for its higher tariffs; the BRICS countries should also consider taking a serious look inward and assessing how they could deepen intra-trade and increase investments.
The ideas of this path have long been documented in the business arm of this grouping, the BRICS Business Council Forum’s various annual reports. Still, few of these ideas have made their way into the political groupings’ resolutions in a manner that profoundly changes the economic engagement landscape amongst these countries. The current environment necessitates such a strong approach.
Consider the South African agricultural sector, which, due to the lack of a trade agreement, faces higher tariffs in attractive BRICS member countries such as China. To name a few, South African macadamias face a 12% import tariff in China. The wine industry faces between 14%-20% in China, and many other products. In addition to higher tariffs, exporters also face phytosanitary barriers. I am singling out China here, but the same can be said about India, another major agricultural importer within BRICS.
For South Africa, agriculture is one of the key strategic industries for driving economic growth and revitalising rural communities. Notably, the sector cannot grow robustly without an expansion into new export markets. Already, the South African agricultural industry exports roughly half of its produce in value terms, amounting to approximately US$13.7 billion in 2024.
But the BRICS countries account for a small share of these exports. Roughly two-thirds of South Africa’s agricultural exports go to the African continent and the EU.
While China has signalled optimism and an intention to lower import tariffs for various goods from Africa, there is no demonstrable evidence of the actual path of implementing this, along with the timelines. Currently, it primarily serves as a political statement.
t, which would encompass the agricultural sector, as this groping is a big market, accounting for roughly half of global agricultural imports, but filled mainly by non-BRICS members.
The U.S. authorities’ tough trade stance necessitates this approach to trade policy, and for the BRICS countries to expand trade avenues for their domestic businesses and alleviate the current friction within this group.
This economic ambition of deepening trade is vital for the long-term sustainability of BRICS.